Plating food: Are you a modernist or a retro?
June 22, 2009 at 11:15 am by Gui Alinat
bee gees
Or like the following picture, even if I suspect the CL readership to possibly have a penchant for unconventional fashion:

- John Travolta
Likewise, chefs follow trends and try their best to stay away from a plate of food that looks like it’s 1977. Some even wouldn’t get caught dead plating stuff from last summer!
Take a look at the pictures of the dishes below and tell me if they belong to one of Paris or Chicago’s trendiest restaurant, or if they definitely have a certain “Saturday night fever” feel to them:

photo courtesy of flabbergastedly.com

photo courtesy of flabbergastedly.com

photo courtesy of flabbergastedly.com

photo courtesy of flabbergastedly.com
Right, I thought so! Pretty horrendous food, isn’t it?
But make no mistake about it. At one point, most people, and that could probably be your grand-parents, parents, or even you, went totally crazy about how cool this food actually looks. It seems, today, quite unimaginable.
So food presentation, like fashion, evolves. Who decides that? Well, marketers might tell you that demand (clients) creates offer (chefs). I think it’s a chicken and egg story. One thing for sure is that chefs, a little like haute-couture designers, remain receptive to what their clients demand, and offer their creation to the culinary world. Today, chefs like Grant Achatz (Chicago), Ferran Adria (Spain), Michel Bras (France) or Pierre Gagnaire (France) among others, are the force that pushes the canons of culinary arts design forward.

plate by Alinea's Grant Achatz

plate by Alinea's Grant Achatz

plate by Alinea's Grant Achatz
Not only does food “fashion” evolves; It also actually evolves quite fast. The frankenfoods you saw earlier date back from circa 1960-70. Look, even today, spectacular foams and spheres, for instance, already get a slightly tired air of deja vu, mainly induced by their ubiquity. What will happen to them in, say, 10 or 20 years?

foam – photo courtesy of relaischateaux.com

foam and sphere – photo courtesy of chefspencil.com
And of course, culinary “coolness” is subject to fluctuating demographics, cultural differences and other factors. What looks coolest to someone in rural Iowa may look totally out of it to someone in New York City for instance, and vice versa.
What interests me here, however, is that for my plate to look like it has pizzazz, I’ll need to keep in mind 2 things. First, I need to make sure I know my audience (Iowa or NYC?) and two, I need to follow culinary trends relevant to my audience. Keep that in mind when you plate your food, people, because that’s important to remember.
LESSON FOR TODAY:
1. Know your audience
2. Be aware of culinary trends for your audience.










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